http://terrorism.foreignpolicyblogs.com/2010/12/04/review-of-maplecrofts-%E2
%80%9Cterrorism-risk-index-2011%E2%80%9D/ 


Review of Maplecroft's "Terrorism Risk Index 2011"


By Sunny Peter <http://terrorism.foreignpolicyblogs.com/author/sunnypeter/>


Saturday, December 4 3:30 pm EST

UK based risk advisory company; Maplecroft has released its annual Terrorism
Risk Index (TRI) for the year 2010-11.  The report released recently shows
some important variations in the patterns of terrorist activities on the
global scale.

A summary of the report released to this blog, indicates a notable increase
of terrorism risk status of Greece and Russia. This is a prominent shift
reflected in this year's TRI when compared to the year report released by
Maplecroft. Russia has moved up from medium risk category country into the
high risk category. This, the report says, is primarily due to an increase
in large-scale mass-casualty attacks carried out by separatists from the
North Caucasus. The report indicates that March 2010 bombings on the Moscow
Metro, for example, were the deadliest attacks on the city's underground
rail system and the first terrorist attack on Moscow's Metro since 2004. In
another attack in September 2010, a suicide car bomber detonated at the
central market in Vladikavkaz, North Ossetia-Alania killing at least 17 and
injuring more than 160.

However, the report indicates that the largest fall in rankings is in the
case of Greece, which dropped from 57 to 24 to overtake Spain (27) and
become the European country most at risk from terrorist attacks. The report
agrees that not many people would expect Greece to emerge as a high risk
country. However, the report says that the challenge Greece faces is from
left-wing terrorism that has caused its increased risk profile. Between June
2009 and June 2010, the country experienced 180 attacks - more than took
place in Yemen. Recently, small left-wing groups have re-emerged, attacking
a range of targets. Attacks tend to be non-fatal, but they can be highly
disruptive as was seen in early November 2010, when a series of parcel bombs
were addressed to embassies in Athens as well as European leaders and
institutions.

Another interesting trend that the TRI 2011 presents is in Yemen. The report
says that Yemen saw a very significant increase in risk. It was included in
the extreme risk category for the first time. This is due to an increase in
the number of attacks on its soil as well as its use as a haven by al-Qaeda.
Between June 2008 and June 2009, only 31 terrorist attacks were recorded in
Yemen. This increased to a total of 109 attacks between June 2009 and June
2010. Yemen's most infamous association with terrorism, however, is its
apparent use as a haven for al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP). AQAP
was behind an airliner bombing plot in December 2009 when a passenger
attempted to set off plastic explosives on an international passenger flight
from Schiphol Airport in the Netherlands, to Detroit Metropolitan Airport,
USA. More recently, the group was behind a plot involving packages
containing bombs sent from Yemen in cargo planes. Two were intercepted in
the UK and Dubai.

The Terrorism Risk Index has been developed by Maplecroft, and comprises of
three separate sub-indices: incidence - which calculates the frequency of
attacks over a 12-month period (June 2009 - June 2010, the latest available
data); intensity -a calculation of how lethal terrorist attacks are. The
report indicates that in some countries like Greece for example, there have
been a lot of small scale attacks that typically do not kill anyone. In
other countries, like Iraq, Somalia and Afghanistan for example, terrorist
attacks are designed to kill as many people as possible. The intensity index
also counts the number of mass-casualty attacks per country. The third
includes historical aspects- the historical component looks at a country's
past experience of terrorism, whether it has a long-standing militant group
that has operated in the country, for instance, Colombia's FARC which has
been active since the 1960s. Based on these parameters the Index, released
annually covers 196 countries.

The release from the company indicates that to maintain consistence in
definition the data used for the analysis is taken up the US National
Counter-terrorism Center's Worldwide Incidents Tracking System (NCTC). The
company agrees that terrorism by itself is hard to define, making it harder
for analysts to review data. Hard still is the fact that the analysis of
terror activities globally is influenced by various subjective factors. It
agrees that there is "no universally agreed definition of terrorism and any
attempt at defining such a politically-loaded word is bound to provoke
debate." Hence to overcome the ideological underpinnings that overstretch
the definition of the phenomenon called terrorism, TRI adopts a very broad
definition. For the purposes of the index, Maplecroft defines terrorism as
"incidents in which sub-national or clandestine groups or individuals
deliberately attack civilians or non-combatants (including military
personnel and assets outside war zones and war-like settings)."

At a subjective level the report agrees that it is not always possible to
determine an ideological motive for such attacks, nor the exact
circumstances under which they occurred. The report notes that it is not
always easy to distinguish where the perpetrators of the attacks are foreign
nationals operating in a third country or are nationals from the same
country where the attack takes place. Therefore, to capture the risk posed
by al-Qaeda and other international Islamist groups, Maplecroft has
introduced a component to the index which tracks whether a country has
experienced an attack by al-Qaeda, al-Shabaab or similar, or whether it has
been threatened by one of these groups.

The report draws up a list of countries that it considers to be at risk of
an al-Qaeda attack (including al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula and al-Qaeda
in the Islamic Maghreb), or an attack by al-Shabaab or another international
Islamist group. These countries are: Afghanistan, Algeria, Egypt, Israel,
India, Indonesia, Iraq, Iran, Lebanon, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Pakistan,
Palestinian Occupied Territory, Somalia, Tajikistan, Uganda, USA, Uzbekistan
and Yemen. The countries that have been threatened or have had failed plots
by al-Qaeda or another international Islamist group include: Australia,
Bangladesh, Bahrain, Canada, Germany, Denmark, Spain, Ethiopia, France,
United Kingdom, Kenya, Kuwait, Morocco, Netherlands, Norway, Philippines,
Russia, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Turkmenistan, Tunisia, Turkey, Oman and Qatar.
Further the report indicates the other countries that are considered to be
at risk due to regional proximity of such extremists groups. These include;
Djibouti, Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, Libya, Tanzania and Nigeria.

The worst scoring on Maplecroft Terrorism Risk Index are sixteen countries
rated as 'extreme risk' with Somalia (1), Pakistan (2), Iraq (3),
Afghanistan (4), Palestinian Occupied Territories (5), Colombia (6),
Thailand (7), Philippines (8), Yemen (9) and Russia (10). Maplecroft report
found no major Western economies in the high or 'extreme risk' bracket; the
United States (ranked 33 on the risk index), France (44) and the United
Kingdom (46) all remain in the 'medium-risk' category. India is ranked 16 in
the list, has been categorised as an 'extreme risk' nation in the index of
global terror risk. "India experienced a total of 749 terrorist incidents
between June 2009 and June 2010. This compares to 775 terrorist attacks
between June 2008 and 2009, a year previously. Levels of terrorism in India
have thus remained constant and the country's ranking has remained in the
extreme risk category," the index explained. China rose to number 43 from
number 54 due to an increase in the intensity of security incidents in
2008-09 compared to 2006-07. Iran rose to number 19 from number 25, due to
insurgencies in Baluchistan and Khuzestan and rising anti-government
sentiments and Egypt rose to number 54 from number 66, due to a spate of
minor security incidents in late 2008 and early 2009.

Maplecroft's
Analysis of Terror Risk Countries

Maplecroft's Analysis of Terror Risk Countries

Terrorism Blog wishes to thank Jason McGeown, Communications Manager at
Maplecroft for kindly providing a summary of the TRI for this report.

 
<http://terrorism.foreignpolicyblogs.com/2010/12/04/review-of-maplecrofts-%E
2%80%9Cterrorism-risk-index-2011%E2%80%9D/> 


 



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